Jadavji Laboratory



Biomedical Sciences

Southern Illinois University



High dietary folate in pregnant mice leads to pseudo-MTHFR deficiency and altered methyl metabolism, with embryonic growth delay and short-term memory impairment in offspring


Journal article


Renata H. Bahous, N. Jadavji, L. Deng, M. Cosín-Tomás, Jessica Lu, O. Malysheva, K. Leung, Ming-kai Ho, M. Pallàs, P. Kaliman, N. Greene, B. Bedell, M. Caudill, R. Rozen
Human Molecular Genetics, 2017

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMedCentral PubMed
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APA   Click to copy
Bahous, R. H., Jadavji, N., Deng, L., Cosín-Tomás, M., Lu, J., Malysheva, O., … Rozen, R. (2017). High dietary folate in pregnant mice leads to pseudo-MTHFR deficiency and altered methyl metabolism, with embryonic growth delay and short-term memory impairment in offspring. Human Molecular Genetics.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Bahous, Renata H., N. Jadavji, L. Deng, M. Cosín-Tomás, Jessica Lu, O. Malysheva, K. Leung, et al. “High Dietary Folate in Pregnant Mice Leads to Pseudo-MTHFR Deficiency and Altered Methyl Metabolism, with Embryonic Growth Delay and Short-Term Memory Impairment in Offspring.” Human Molecular Genetics (2017).


MLA   Click to copy
Bahous, Renata H., et al. “High Dietary Folate in Pregnant Mice Leads to Pseudo-MTHFR Deficiency and Altered Methyl Metabolism, with Embryonic Growth Delay and Short-Term Memory Impairment in Offspring.” Human Molecular Genetics, 2017.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{renata2017a,
  title = {High dietary folate in pregnant mice leads to pseudo-MTHFR deficiency and altered methyl metabolism, with embryonic growth delay and short-term memory impairment in offspring},
  year = {2017},
  journal = {Human Molecular Genetics},
  author = {Bahous, Renata H. and Jadavji, N. and Deng, L. and Cosín-Tomás, M. and Lu, Jessica and Malysheva, O. and Leung, K. and Ho, Ming-kai and Pallàs, M. and Kaliman, P. and Greene, N. and Bedell, B. and Caudill, M. and Rozen, R.}
}

Abstract

Abstract Methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR) generates methyltetrahydrofolate for methylation reactions. Severe MTHFR deficiency results in homocystinuria and neurologic impairment. Mild MTHFR deficiency (677C > T polymorphism) increases risk for complex traits, including neuropsychiatric disorders. Although low dietary folate impacts brain development, recent concerns have focused on high folate intake following food fortification and increased vitamin use. Our goal was to determine whether high dietary folate during pregnancy affects brain development in murine offspring. Female mice were placed on control diet (CD) or folic acid‐supplemented diet (FASD) throughout mating, pregnancy and lactation. Three‐week‐old male pups were evaluated for motor and cognitive function. Tissues from E17.5 embryos, pups and dams were collected for choline/methyl metabolite measurements, immunoblotting or gene expression of relevant enzymes. Brains were examined for morphology of hippocampus and cortex. Pups of FASD mothers displayed short‐term memory impairment, decreased hippocampal size and decreased thickness of the dentate gyrus. MTHFR protein levels were reduced in FASD pup livers, with lower concentrations of phosphocholine and glycerophosphocholine in liver and hippocampus, respectively. FASD pup brains showed evidence of altered acetylcholine availability and Dnmt3a mRNA was reduced in cortex and hippocampus. E17.5 embryos and placentas from FASD dams were smaller. MTHFR protein and mRNA were reduced in embryonic liver, with lower concentrations of choline, betaine and phosphocholine. Embryonic brain displayed altered development of cortical layers. In summary, high folate intake during pregnancy leads to pseudo‐MTHFR deficiency, disturbed choline/methyl metabolism, embryonic growth delay and memory impairment in offspring. These findings highlight the unintended negative consequences of supplemental folic acid.